WEBVTT 00:00:00.810 --> 00:00:06.090 I remember the first time that I saw people injecting drugs. 00:00:06.090 --> 00:00:09.640 I had just arrived in Vancouver to lead a research project 00:00:09.640 --> 00:00:15.100 in HIV prevention in the infamous Downtown East Side. 00:00:15.100 --> 00:00:17.650 It was in the lobby of the Portland Hotel, 00:00:17.650 --> 00:00:20.560 a supportive housing project that gave rooms 00:00:20.560 --> 00:00:22.960 to the most marginalized people in the city, 00:00:22.960 --> 00:00:25.706 the so-called "difficult to house." 00:00:26.800 --> 00:00:30.189 I'll never forget the young woman standing on the stairs 00:00:30.214 --> 00:00:34.150 repeatedly jabbing herself with a needle and screaming, 00:00:34.293 --> 00:00:35.770 "I can't find a vein," 00:00:35.770 --> 00:00:38.404 as blood splattered on the wall. 00:00:40.140 --> 00:00:44.100 In response to the desperate state of affairs, the drug use, 00:00:44.100 --> 00:00:48.780 the poverty, the violence, the soaring rates of HIV, 00:00:48.780 --> 00:00:53.430 Vancouver declared a public health emergency in 1997. 00:00:53.430 --> 00:00:56.825 This opened the door to expanding harm reduction services, 00:00:56.850 --> 00:00:58.530 distributing more needles, 00:00:58.530 --> 00:01:00.299 increasing access to methadone, 00:01:00.324 --> 00:01:04.080 and, finally, opening a supervised injection site. 00:01:04.080 --> 00:01:07.841 Things that make injecting drugs less hazardous. 00:01:08.910 --> 00:01:11.448 But today, 20 years later, 00:01:11.473 --> 00:01:15.810 harm reduction is still viewed as some sort of radical concept. 00:01:15.810 --> 00:01:19.532 In some places, it's still illegal to carry a clean needle. 00:01:19.740 --> 00:01:22.476 Drug users are far more likely to be arrested 00:01:22.501 --> 00:01:24.889 than to be offered methadone therapy. 00:01:25.440 --> 00:01:28.260 Recent proposals for supervised injection sites 00:01:28.260 --> 00:01:31.680 in cities like Seattle, Baltimore and New York 00:01:31.680 --> 00:01:34.013 have been met with stiff opposition: 00:01:34.800 --> 00:01:39.633 opposition that goes against everything we know about addiction. 00:01:40.149 --> 00:01:41.379 Why is that? 00:01:41.633 --> 00:01:44.227 Why are we still stuck on the idea 00:01:44.252 --> 00:01:50.132 that the only option is to stop using -- that any drug use will not be tolerated? 00:01:51.060 --> 00:01:54.780 Why do we ignore countless personal stories 00:01:54.780 --> 00:01:57.300 and overwhelming scientific evidence 00:01:57.300 --> 00:01:59.303 that harm reduction works? 00:02:00.980 --> 00:02:04.790 Critics say that harm reduction doesn't stop people 00:02:04.790 --> 00:02:06.439 from using illegal drugs. 00:02:07.034 --> 00:02:09.770 Well, actually, that is the whole point. 00:02:09.770 --> 00:02:12.650 After every criminal and societal sanction 00:02:12.650 --> 00:02:13.975 that we can come up with, 00:02:14.396 --> 00:02:17.911 people still use drugs, and far too many die. 00:02:19.100 --> 00:02:21.920 Critics also say that we are giving up on people 00:02:21.920 --> 00:02:26.316 by not focusing our attention on treatment and recovery. 00:02:26.951 --> 00:02:28.740 In fact, it is just the opposite. 00:02:28.740 --> 00:02:30.180 We are not giving up on people. 00:02:30.180 --> 00:02:32.540 We know that if recovery is ever going to happen 00:02:32.540 --> 00:02:34.730 we must keep people alive. 00:02:34.730 --> 00:02:38.330 Offering someone a clean needle or a safe place to inject 00:02:38.330 --> 00:02:40.899 is the first step to treatment and recovery. 00:02:42.950 --> 00:02:45.410 Critics also claim that harm reduction 00:02:45.410 --> 00:02:48.864 gives the wrong message to our children about drug users. 00:02:49.864 --> 00:02:53.998 The last time I looked, these drug users are our children. 00:02:54.268 --> 00:02:58.340 The message of harm reduction is that, well, drugs can hurt you. 00:02:58.340 --> 00:03:01.250 We still must reach out to people who are addicted. 00:03:01.250 --> 00:03:05.750 A needle exchange is not an advertisement for drug use. 00:03:05.750 --> 00:03:09.770 Neither is a methadone clinic or a supervised injection site. 00:03:09.770 --> 00:03:12.670 What you see there are people sick and hurting, 00:03:13.160 --> 00:03:16.043 hardly an endorsement for drug use. 00:03:16.876 --> 00:03:19.920 Let's take supervised injection sites, for example. 00:03:19.920 --> 00:03:23.570 Probably the most misunderstood health intervention ever. 00:03:23.570 --> 00:03:26.270 All we are saying is that allowing people 00:03:26.270 --> 00:03:30.106 to inject in a clean, dry space with fresh needles, 00:03:30.131 --> 00:03:32.329 surrounded by people who care 00:03:32.726 --> 00:03:35.867 is a lot better than injecting in a dingy alley, 00:03:35.892 --> 00:03:39.153 sharing contaminated needles and hiding out from police. 00:03:39.470 --> 00:03:41.217 It's better for everybody. 00:03:42.810 --> 00:03:48.278 The first supervised injection site in Vancouver was at 327 Carol Street, 00:03:48.794 --> 00:03:53.936 a narrow room with a concrete floor, a few chairs and a box of clean needles. 00:03:54.150 --> 00:03:56.460 The police would often lock it down, 00:03:56.460 --> 00:04:00.190 but somehow it always mysteriously reopened, 00:04:00.493 --> 00:04:02.594 often with the aid of a crowbar. 00:04:03.720 --> 00:04:05.490 I would go down there some evenings 00:04:05.490 --> 00:04:08.685 to provide medical care for people who were injecting drugs. 00:04:08.749 --> 00:04:11.940 I was always struck with the commitment and compassion 00:04:11.940 --> 00:04:14.796 of the people who operated and used the site. 00:04:15.240 --> 00:04:18.450 No judgment, no hassles, no fear, 00:04:18.450 --> 00:04:20.430 lots of profound conversation. 00:04:20.455 --> 00:04:23.820 I learned that despite unimaginable trauma, 00:04:23.820 --> 00:04:26.653 physical pain and mental illness, 00:04:26.923 --> 00:04:30.034 that everyone there thought that things would get better. 00:04:30.630 --> 00:04:36.574 Most were convinced that, someday, they'd stop using drugs altogether. 00:04:38.580 --> 00:04:41.970 That room was the forerunner to North America's 00:04:41.970 --> 00:04:46.327 first government-sanctioned supervised injection site, called INSITE. 00:04:46.530 --> 00:04:51.276 It opened in September of 2003 as a three-year research project. 00:04:51.480 --> 00:04:56.043 The conservative government was intent on closing it down at the end of the study. 00:04:56.580 --> 00:05:00.450 After eight years, the battle to close INSITE 00:05:00.450 --> 00:05:02.970 went all the way up to Canada's Supreme Court. 00:05:02.970 --> 00:05:04.770 It pitted the government of Canada 00:05:04.770 --> 00:05:08.130 against two people with a long history of drug use 00:05:08.130 --> 00:05:10.593 who knew the benefits of INSITE firsthand: 00:05:10.982 --> 00:05:13.140 Dean Wilson and Shelley Tomic. 00:05:14.370 --> 00:05:19.282 The court ruled in favor of keeping INSITE open by nine to zero. 00:05:19.530 --> 00:05:24.347 The justices were scathing in their response to the government's case. 00:05:24.720 --> 00:05:25.870 And I quote: 00:05:26.029 --> 00:05:30.663 "The effect of denying the services of INSITE to the population that it serves 00:05:30.688 --> 00:05:32.068 and the correlative increase 00:05:32.093 --> 00:05:35.750 in the risk of death and disease to injection drug users 00:05:35.751 --> 00:05:38.791 is grossly disproportionate to any benefit 00:05:38.902 --> 00:05:40.846 that Canada might derive 00:05:41.028 --> 00:05:45.497 from presenting a uniform stance on the possession of narcotics." 00:05:47.540 --> 00:05:49.913 This was a hopeful moment for harm reduction. 00:05:50.390 --> 00:05:53.802 Yet, despite this strong message from the Supreme Court, 00:05:54.290 --> 00:05:57.004 it was, until very recently, 00:05:57.029 --> 00:06:00.209 impossible to open up any new sites in Canada. 00:06:00.800 --> 00:06:05.854 There was one interesting thing that happened in December of 2016, 00:06:05.879 --> 00:06:08.934 when due to the overdose crisis, 00:06:08.959 --> 00:06:10.966 the government of British Columbia allowed 00:06:10.991 --> 00:06:14.213 the opening of overdose prevention sites. 00:06:15.117 --> 00:06:18.505 Essentially ignoring the federal approval process, 00:06:18.530 --> 00:06:22.900 community groups opened up about 22 of these de-facto illegal 00:06:22.925 --> 00:06:25.694 supervised injection sites across the province. 00:06:26.600 --> 00:06:27.988 Virtually overnight, 00:06:28.013 --> 00:06:31.135 thousands of people could use drugs under supervision. 00:06:31.160 --> 00:06:36.025 Hundreds of overdoses were reversed by naloxone, and nobody died. 00:06:36.530 --> 00:06:40.847 In fact, this is what's happened at INSITE over the last 14 years: 00:06:41.363 --> 00:06:46.340 75,000 different individuals have injected illegal drugs, 00:06:46.340 --> 00:06:49.347 more than three and a half million times, 00:06:49.580 --> 00:06:51.951 and not one person has died. 00:06:52.157 --> 00:06:56.061 Nobody has ever died at INSITE. 00:06:58.950 --> 00:07:00.150 So there you have it. 00:07:00.150 --> 00:07:05.767 We have scientific evidence and successes from needle exchanges 00:07:05.792 --> 00:07:08.650 methadone and supervised injection sites. 00:07:08.850 --> 00:07:13.142 These are common-sense, compassionate approaches to drug use 00:07:13.167 --> 00:07:15.778 that improve health, bring connection 00:07:15.803 --> 00:07:18.834 and greatly reduce suffering and death. 00:07:20.540 --> 00:07:23.630 So why haven't harm reduction programs taken off? 00:07:23.630 --> 00:07:28.883 Why do we still think that drug use is law enforcement issue? 00:07:30.720 --> 00:07:34.339 Our disdain for drugs and drug users goes very deep. 00:07:34.386 --> 00:07:37.810 We are bombarded with images and media stories 00:07:37.810 --> 00:07:40.254 about the horrible impacts of drugs. 00:07:40.600 --> 00:07:43.960 We have stigmatized entire communities. 00:07:43.960 --> 00:07:49.563 We applaud military-inspired operations that bring down drug dealers, 00:07:49.809 --> 00:07:53.170 and we appear unfazed by building more jails 00:07:53.170 --> 00:07:58.566 to incarcerate people whose only crime is using drugs. 00:07:58.960 --> 00:08:01.880 Virtually millions of people are caught up 00:08:01.905 --> 00:08:05.825 in a hopeless cycle of incarceration, violence and poverty 00:08:06.063 --> 00:08:11.857 that has been created by our drug laws and not the drugs themselves. 00:08:12.900 --> 00:08:17.026 How do I explain to people that drug users deserve care and support 00:08:17.051 --> 00:08:18.725 and the freedom to live their lives 00:08:18.750 --> 00:08:24.289 when all we see are images of guns and handcuffs and jail cells? 00:08:25.710 --> 00:08:27.101 Let's be clear: 00:08:27.736 --> 00:08:32.212 criminalization is just a way to institutionalize stigma. 00:08:33.000 --> 00:08:38.420 Making drugs illegal does nothing to stop people from using them. 00:08:41.888 --> 00:08:45.280 Our paralysis to see things differently 00:08:45.280 --> 00:08:49.840 is also based on an entirely false narrative about drug use. 00:08:49.840 --> 00:08:52.086 We have been led to believe that drug users 00:08:52.111 --> 00:08:55.888 are irresponsible people who just want to get high, 00:08:55.913 --> 00:08:58.427 and then through their own personal failings 00:08:58.452 --> 00:09:02.140 spiral down into a life of crime and poverty, 00:09:02.140 --> 00:09:06.076 losing their jobs, their families and, ultimately, their lives. 00:09:07.190 --> 00:09:10.523 In reality, most drug users have a story, 00:09:10.745 --> 00:09:15.170 whether it's childhood trauma, sexual abuse, mental illness 00:09:15.170 --> 00:09:16.640 or a personal tragedy. 00:09:16.640 --> 00:09:19.455 The drugs are used to numb the pain. 00:09:22.130 --> 00:09:28.241 We must understand that as we approach people with so much trauma. 00:09:29.210 --> 00:09:34.185 At its core, our drug policies are really a social justice issue. 00:09:34.210 --> 00:09:39.297 While the media may focus on overdose deaths like Prince and Michael Jackson, 00:09:39.900 --> 00:09:41.398 the majority of the suffering 00:09:41.423 --> 00:09:44.970 happens to people who are living on the margins, 00:09:44.995 --> 00:09:47.121 the poor and the dispossessed. 00:09:47.570 --> 00:09:50.479 They don't vote; they are often alone. 00:09:50.920 --> 00:09:53.812 They are society's disposable people. 00:09:55.040 --> 00:09:59.970 Even within health care, drug use is highly stigmatized. 00:09:59.970 --> 00:10:03.080 People using drugs avoid the health care system. 00:10:03.080 --> 00:10:05.670 They know that once engaged in clinical care 00:10:05.670 --> 00:10:08.779 or admitted to hospital, they will be treated poorly. 00:10:08.804 --> 00:10:12.326 And their supply line, be it heroin, cocaine or crystal meth 00:10:12.351 --> 00:10:13.866 will be interrupted. 00:10:14.700 --> 00:10:18.135 On top of that, they will be asked a barrage of question 00:10:18.160 --> 00:10:22.056 that only serve to expose their losses and shame. 00:10:22.350 --> 00:10:23.757 "What drugs do you use?" 00:10:23.757 --> 00:10:25.923 "How long have you been living on the street?" 00:10:25.948 --> 00:10:27.638 "Where are your children?" 00:10:28.320 --> 00:10:30.066 "When were you last in jail?" 00:10:30.580 --> 00:10:34.865 Essentially: "Why the hell don't you stop using drugs?" 00:10:35.826 --> 00:10:40.865 In fact, our entire medical approach to drug use is upside down. 00:10:40.890 --> 00:10:42.040 For some reason, 00:10:42.065 --> 00:10:47.318 we have decided that abstinence is the best way to treat this. 00:10:47.970 --> 00:10:51.420 If you're lucky enough, you may get into a detox program. 00:10:51.420 --> 00:10:54.510 If you live in a community with suboxone or methadone, 00:10:54.510 --> 00:10:56.914 you may get on a substitution program. 00:10:57.480 --> 00:11:01.447 Hardly ever would we offer people what they desperately need to survive: 00:11:01.472 --> 00:11:04.892 a safe prescription for opioids. 00:11:06.040 --> 00:11:10.872 Starting with abstinence is like asking a new diabetic to quit sugar 00:11:10.897 --> 00:11:14.127 or a severe asthmatic to start running marathons 00:11:14.152 --> 00:11:16.342 or a depressed person to just be happy. 00:11:16.480 --> 00:11:18.042 For any other medical condition, 00:11:18.067 --> 00:11:21.090 we would never start with the most extreme option. 00:11:21.400 --> 00:11:23.710 What makes us think that strategy 00:11:23.710 --> 00:11:27.257 would work for something as complex as addiction? 00:11:28.570 --> 00:11:31.030 While unintentional overdoses are not new, 00:11:31.030 --> 00:11:34.150 the scale of the current crisis is unprecedented. 00:11:34.150 --> 00:11:36.943 The Center for Disease Control estimated 00:11:36.968 --> 00:11:42.110 that 64,000 Americans died of a drug overdose in 2016, 00:11:42.135 --> 00:11:44.817 far exceeding car crashes or homicides. 00:11:45.700 --> 00:11:49.770 Drug-related mortality is now the leading cause of death 00:11:49.795 --> 00:11:54.310 among men and women between 20 and 50 years old in North America 00:11:55.199 --> 00:11:56.382 Think about that. 00:11:57.133 --> 00:12:01.617 How did we get to this point, and why now? 00:12:02.290 --> 00:12:04.960 There is a kind of perfect storm around opioids. 00:12:04.960 --> 00:12:08.715 Drugs like OxyContin, Percocet and Dilaudid 00:12:08.740 --> 00:12:14.073 have been liberally distributed for decades for all kinds of pain. 00:12:14.890 --> 00:12:18.763 It is estimated that two million Americans are daily opioid users, 00:12:19.159 --> 00:12:21.700 and over 60 million people 00:12:21.700 --> 00:12:25.446 received at least one prescription for opioids last year. 00:12:26.140 --> 00:12:29.726 This massive dump of prescription drugs into communitie 00:12:29.751 --> 00:12:34.314 has provided a steady source for people wanting to self-medicate. 00:12:35.160 --> 00:12:38.092 In response to this prescription epidemic, 00:12:38.490 --> 00:12:42.982 people have been cut off, and this has greatly reduced the street supply 00:12:43.860 --> 00:12:46.501 The unintended but predictable consequence 00:12:46.526 --> 00:12:48.217 is an overdose epidemic. 00:12:48.360 --> 00:12:52.685 Many people who were reliant on a steady supply of prescription drugs 00:12:53.010 --> 00:12:54.160 turned to heroin. 00:12:54.185 --> 00:12:57.716 And now the illegal drug market has tragically switched 00:12:57.741 --> 00:13:00.167 to synthetic drugs, mainly fentanyl. 00:13:01.140 --> 00:13:06.034 These new drugs are cheap, potent and extremely hard to dose. 00:13:06.450 --> 00:13:09.172 People are literally being poisoned. 00:13:11.470 --> 00:13:15.668 Can you imagine if this was any other kind of poisoning epidemic? 00:13:15.700 --> 00:13:18.032 What if thousands of people started dying 00:13:18.057 --> 00:13:21.691 from poisoned meat or baby formula or coffee? 00:13:22.041 --> 00:13:24.340 We would be treating this as a true emergency. 00:13:24.340 --> 00:13:28.000 We would immediately be supplying safer alternatives. 00:13:28.000 --> 00:13:30.020 There would be changes in legislation, 00:13:30.020 --> 00:13:33.266 and we would be supporting the victims and their families. 00:13:34.356 --> 00:13:36.365 But for the drug overdose epidemic, 00:13:36.390 --> 00:13:37.742 we have done none of that. 00:13:38.430 --> 00:13:42.658 We continue to demonize the drugs and the peoople who use them 00:13:42.683 --> 00:13:48.492 and blindly pour even more resources into law enforcement. 00:13:50.890 --> 00:13:52.818 So where should we go from here? 00:13:53.763 --> 00:13:57.896 First, we should fully embrace, fund and scale up 00:13:57.921 --> 00:14:00.490 harm reduction programs across North America. 00:14:00.490 --> 00:14:03.385 I know that in places like Vancouver, 00:14:03.410 --> 00:14:06.942 harm reduction has been a lifeline to care and treatment. 00:14:07.426 --> 00:14:09.820 I know that the number of overdose deaths 00:14:09.820 --> 00:14:12.796 would be far higher without harm reduction. 00:14:13.180 --> 00:14:18.013 And I personally know hundreds of people who are alive today 00:14:18.810 --> 00:14:20.656 because of harm reduction. 00:14:21.810 --> 00:14:23.750 But harm reduction is just the start. 00:14:23.750 --> 00:14:27.825 If we truly want to make an impact on this drug crisis, 00:14:28.070 --> 00:14:31.940 we need to have a serious conversation about prohibition 00:14:31.940 --> 00:14:33.486 and criminal punishment. 00:14:34.454 --> 00:14:40.271 We need to recognize that drug us is first and foremost a public health issue 00:14:41.358 --> 00:14:47.715 and turn to comprehensive social and health colutions. 00:14:48.900 --> 00:14:51.050 We already have a model for how this can work. 00:14:51.075 --> 00:14:54.390 In 2001, Portugal was having its own drug crisis. 00:14:54.390 --> 00:14:57.600 Lots of people using drugs, high crime rates 00:14:57.600 --> 00:14:59.490 and an overdose epidemic. 00:14:59.490 --> 00:15:03.390 They defied global conventions and decriminalized all drug possession. 00:15:04.830 --> 00:15:07.290 Money that was spent on drug enforcement 00:15:07.290 --> 00:15:10.583 was redirected to health and rehabilitation programs. 00:15:11.060 --> 00:15:12.369 The results are in. 00:15:13.050 --> 00:15:16.280 Overall drug use is down dramatically. 00:15:17.240 --> 00:15:19.811 Overdoses are uncommon. 00:15:19.836 --> 00:15:22.542 Many more people are in treatment, 00:15:24.115 --> 00:15:26.782 and people have been given their lives back. 00:15:29.330 --> 00:15:35.130 We have come so far down the road of prohibition, punishment and prejudice 00:15:35.155 --> 00:15:37.743 that we have become indifferent to the suffering 00:15:37.768 --> 00:15:41.926 that we have inflicted on the most vulnerable people in our society. 00:15:42.320 --> 00:15:45.895 This year even more people will get caught up 00:15:45.920 --> 00:15:47.542 in the illegal drug trade. 00:15:48.620 --> 00:15:52.858 Thousands of children will learn that their mother or father 00:15:52.940 --> 00:15:56.318 has been sent to jail for using drugs. 00:15:57.840 --> 00:16:00.900 And far too many parents will be notified 00:16:00.900 --> 00:16:05.542 that their son or daughter has died of a drug overdose. 00:16:06.454 --> 00:16:08.550 It doesn't have to be this way. 00:16:10.444 --> 00:16:11.594 Thank you. 00:16:11.618 --> 00:16:13.618 (Applause)